Every spring, homes flood the market. Only this year, you might notice a surge of listings that arenât technically for saleâŠyet. Zillow Preview listings let buyers scope out homes before theyâre officially for sale. So far, 30 brokerages have signed up, with many more circling. Meanwhile, Compass is feeding its own pre-market listings to Redfin; eXp is doing the same with Realtor.com, Homes.com, and ComeHome.com. So what does this mean for house hunters? Redfin estimates that pre-market listings could raise inventory by 6% to 12%âa meaningful lift, given that market supply still hasnât recovered to pre-pandemic levels. âThis remains a supply-constrained housing market,â explains Zillow Chief Economist Mischa Fisher. âSo making more listings broadly visible is critical.â Pre-market listings arenât new. About 80% of multiple listing services already offer a âcoming soonâ category. Whatâs changed is where these listings are surfacing and who can see them. âPre-market listings have existed for many years via pocket listings and private networks,â points out Eric Bramlett, a real estate agent in Austin, TX. Zillowâs latest move âprovides more transparency to whatâs been happening behind closed doors.â How buyers benefit: Zillow Preview listings give buyers more homes to shop and more time to prepare and ponder their options before a house is officially for sale. âBuyers can see whatâs coming, plan their next steps, and be ready to act when a home they love becomes available,â says Zillowâs home trends expert, Amanda Pendleton. The catch? âBuyers will need to be much faster,â says Matt Bigach, a real estate investor in Knoxville, TN. âThe âquiet windowâ where buyers would negotiate without competition will disappear.â Pendleton recommends pre-scheduling tours, much like youâd pre-book seats at a hot new restaurant weeks before opening night. Whatâs in it for sellers: Property owners now have a low-stakes window to gauge interest in their home and adjust accordingly. LeAnn Hiatt, a real estate investor based in Kansas City, MO, plans to use this soft launch phase âto determine how much interest there is for a property before I decide to go ahead and take action aggressively.â And since days on market donât start counting yet, sellers can experiment without their listing appearing stale or overlooked. âSellers can see how buyers are respondingâthrough views, saves, and tour requestsâand use that as a signal to refine their pricing and marketing strategy,â says Pendleton. Fisher doesnât expect a dramatic shift in industry-wide metrics like days on market. Still, highly motivated individuals willing to make the most of this head start can gain a genuine edge: âIt can help sellers connect with the right buyers more quickly and make the process more efficient,â she says. One tip: Real estate portals have inked deals with separate brokerages, so there is no one-stop shop for all pre-market listings; prepare to hop around to see them all. |